View clinical trials related to Solar Lentigines.
Filter by:This is a single center, randomized, double-blind and placebo controlled clinical study to evaluate the efficacy and safety of brightening microneedle patch on facial solar lentigines. Subjects who are 30 to 65-year-old with solar lentigines on their faces will receive brightening microneedle patches on facial solar lentigines once a day for 4 weeks. Afterwards, facial images and skin detectors will be used to analysis their skin, according to various skin tone indexes and skin response score sheets.
Benign pigmented lesions as solar lentigines are a common finding in Caucasian individuals. Their removal may be requested for aesthetic reasons. The goal of the study is comparing the efficacy and tolerance of two different therapy modalities established for treating solar lentigines. The right back of the hand side will be treated with the Q-switched SINON Rubin 694nm Laser, the left back of the hand side with a hydrochinon containing bleaching cream (Pigmanorm® cream). The investigators estimate that a physical therapy with a Q-switched Rubin laser system is more effective in the removal of solar lentigines than a topical chemical therapy with a hydrochinon containing bleaching cream.
The purpose of this study is to determine whether picosecond laser is effective in the treatment of age (sun) spots.
To evaluate safety and efficacy of Tri-Luma® cream as an adjunctive treatment to cryotherapy when used in the pre- and post-procedure phases for the treatment of solar lentigines on the back of the hands and in the prevention of post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation after cryotherapy.
The purpose of this study is a comparison of efficacy and side effects of Q-switched Ruby laser treatment for solar lentigines in two different skin types II and IV.